Sans Superellipse Upme 1 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, gaming, sports branding, futuristic, techy, sporty, industrial, retro sci-fi, impact, modernize, tech branding, sci-fi titling, geometric consistency, rounded corners, squared curves, geometric, chunky, compact apertures.
A heavy, geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse primitives, with broad proportions and softly squared curves. Strokes are consistently thick with smooth, radius-based joins and minimal modulation, giving counters a rounded-rectangular feel (notably in O/o and D). Terminals are blunt and often squared-off, while diagonals (V, W, X, Z) are cut cleanly and maintain the same robust weight. Apertures tend to be tight and the inner spaces are compact, producing a dense, high-impact silhouette that stays clean in display sizes.
Best suited for headlines, logotypes, and short bursts of text where a bold, futuristic voice is desirable. It works well for sports branding, gaming/tech graphics, packaging, UI accents, and poster titling where the rounded-square geometry can carry the visual identity.
The overall tone reads modern and engineered, with a distinctly futuristic, tech-interface flavor. Its rounded-square geometry feels sporty and industrial at once, evoking sci-fi titling and contemporary product branding rather than traditional editorial typography.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a cohesive superelliptical geometry, pairing blunt terminals and compact counters to create a sturdy, futuristic display voice. It prioritizes strong silhouette and brand recognition over neutral, long-form readability.
Uppercase forms are especially assertive and blocky, while the lowercase maintains the same geometric logic with simplified, single-storey constructions. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect style with strong horizontals and a cohesive, modular rhythm. The design’s strong curvature discipline and squared counters create a recognizable voice, but the compact apertures may reduce clarity in small text.